Many people in Benicia start with internet searches—sometimes even “AI” or chat-style tools—because they want clarity quickly. But for Camp Lejeune cases, speed can backfire if it causes you to:
- rely on a generic illness list instead of your doctor-documented history
- submit inconsistent statements about where you lived or worked
- miss the practical importance of dates (diagnosis dates, symptom progression, and relevant exposure windows)
A better first step is to assemble a working timeline you can trust. That means pulling together service/residence details and medical records you already have, then identifying what’s missing.
Goal: make it easier for an attorney to evaluate whether your evidence can support exposure and medical causation—without guessing.


